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Tesla shares rise as Musk ‘regrets’ posts about Donald Trump; US-China trade framework cheers markets – business live


Musk: I regret some of my posts about Trump

Elon Musk has said he “regrets” some of his posts about Donald Trump, in an apparent attempt to patch up relations with the US president.

In a post on X, Musk has written:

I regret some of my posts about President @realDonaldTrump last week. They went too far.

This abrupt U-turn comes almost a week after the world’s richest man launched a fierce attack on Trump, calling his “big, beautiful bill” a “disgusting abomination”.

Musk also alleged, without supplying evidence, that Trump was implicated in the Jeffrey Epstein files, a claim denied by Epstein’s former attorney [Musk appears to have subsequently deleted this post].

Trump hit back at Musk last week, claiming the Tesla CEO had “lost his mind” and threatening to cancel Musk’s US government contracts and subsidies.

The row hit Tesla’s share price last week, and had a significant impact on Musk’s wealth – according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, he has lost approximately $90bn of his fortune.

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Key events

Over in parliament, Rachel Reeves will soon begin delivering the government’s spending review to MPs, outlining spending plans for the next few years.

We’re live-blogging it here:

The review will not be a “game changer” for the markets, predicts Fawad Razaqzada, market analyst at City Index.

In the UK, Chancellor Rachel Reeves will unveil her Spending Review—but expectations are low. The headline takeaway is simple: the coffers are tight.

Departmental spending is set to grow by just 1% in real terms annually over the next three years, with most of that going to health, defence, and education. This isn’t a full Budget, and with no Office for Budget Responsibility forecast alongside it, there’s not much scope for headline-grabbing fiscal moves.

Don’t expect fireworks in gilts or the pound as a result.





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